Fredericksburg Standard (Fredericksburg, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 48, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 26, 1922 Page: 4 of 10
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FREDERICKSBURG STANDARD, AUGUST, 26, 1922
4
kbev
f
ay We handle all makes of 0099000 ♦<♦♦♦♦♦♦
• the
to his rep
hl
STATE NCWS
()
ina
uniform
Robert Rumsay, well-known
> toms
0
Dr. W. G. BRYMER
Wilbarger, $8,-
Harris,
I
Camp Mabry
Probst Bldg.
«
3
32
8/7
boy—ah?”
eg
7,
3
Specializes in Chronic Diseases,
Pelegra, Rheumatism, Heart, Liver,
Kidneys, Sto nach. Bowels, Ulcers.
en-
are
State.
sa id:
per
State
Webb
was
States
$3,958 for
$1,000 for
By
hereb
didat
ffice J
l. pie
lar > I
self
for t
of <
reuu
$4,301
3-A;
i of
eus-
Fill Your Requirements
For The Fair Now.
nd
vice
I
myse
fire
pie I
- '.-.-•I
T< X. .
of 105
rohbed
insures
healthful
baking and
food of the
highest quality
at a moderate
p/ice
Contains No Alum
$10,000
Hays Co.
Jefferson,
400 South Flores St.
San Antonio, Texan
The delicious appetizing quality of
cakes, biscuits and muf ins made with
Dr. Price’s Phosphate Baking Powder
will surprise you.
The famous Dr. Price Cook Book covers
the whole field of cookery—includes
helpful directions for canning and
preserving. It’s Free. Sand for a copy
today.
Price Baking Powder Factory,
1001 ndependence Boule vard, Chicago.
Note: Ask your grocer if he has any
cans left of Dr. Price’s at the
special sale price recently offered.
going to take nil he had and the
Large
can
12
ounces
only
25c
Pa Sr
Fredericksburg, Texa
I her
self as
I
I
I her
fol Di
I
tion I
Alao makers of KEiiGG 5 UIIMU> and HAS. aza Lruzuat.z
33
him from
in many
Know th loy of Restful ing to death Saturday .......
1 1
dacy
of S
! xa
tion. I
‘)
1 i
self I
<' f s
at t}
oonie fourth bale
of the body that is dis-eased
if you are sick of being sick try CHIROPRACTIC
WILL T. BUECHNER, D. C.
Palmer School Gradesate
MRS. ELLA BUECHNER, (Lady assistent)
PPPRIGES
Phosphate
Baking
Powder
Kellogg’s
all rigm!
The hole had been drilled 4,250 that in addition to the annoying
Manon
II
aceoreing
would give
oeuction of
requires time
and our motto
is that any-
i thing that’s
\ worth do-
) ing is worth
doing well.
*
the drill stem with dynnamite.
for Katy Bridge on No
Whether it be dress goods,
shoes, etc. for Ladies’ and child-
ren: hats, shoes and clothing for
men and boys; or if it 1*
(} ROCER IES
you will find our lines complete
and the prices in line with the
market and the best quality
feet when the drill stem stuek
and all efforts to pull it were
Woods, an experienced
shooter, and Holliday, a
lawt
nt tv
said I
op^edy. Hut he it ‘
Frash st car
No. 40; Cass and
No. 29-A;
ins” with their commanding offi- spinal column it gives nature a chance to re-build the part
Such appetizing.nourishng hod
for the hot days -
4^^
UU, " CORN FLAKES
they're so easy to digest!
Cut down on heavy food! You’ll feel a lot
better and get away from that drowsy, sluggish
feeling. Eat lighter foods. Kellogg’s Corn
Flakes are ideal, for they are not only delicious in
flavor and appetizing crispness, but nourish and
sustain! Kellogg’s digest easily and rest the
stomach and help keep your head clear and your
body cool.
Kellogg’s Corn Flakes are wonderful with the
“Continued damage by the
Terms
vance I
I
I
I
t "Hh!;. I
I ’ i . 1
Write
I
I
campment at ’
devoting this
problems given
the summer
RICHARD HENKE
BUTCHER.
Fresh Beef, Mutton
Pork, Sausage
and Veal.
PROMPT DELIVERY
Telephone No 65
ant pest
un extent
v < nt able
' homes in
would not save
fficient record in the ser-
Do you arise in the morning as unre-
freshed tin when you retired? Are '
body, brain and nerves all run down? ।
Thi terribl weakness which afflicts
so many i ybe blamed on the lack of
vitamine ad iron in modern foods.
Supply the invigorating elements by
tak gtw Peasant tablet* of Ironixcd
Yeast threc times a day. Everyone
knows that yeast is a wonderful build-
er of stren h a»d energy. But Iron-
ized Yea st < mbodie • a new secret pro-
cc knot 1 as '• iionizationwhich
enables th yeast to produce its results
twice ax quickly. It tones up the great
vital organs, soothes the worn-out
nerves and makes you feel like a new
person. Get Ironized Yeast today and
take a new lease on life, or to try it
entirely free, simply mail postcard for
Famous 3-D ' Trial Treatment Ad-
dress Iron, ted ’least Co., Dept 96,
Atlanta. G I: mized Yea t is recom-
mended aim .. irantced by all good
druggists.
"Say—nou'd you lor'. at hoe r.mvy 'ttatinf it
homo wit two big /or It ;ra ol KcUrgg't Corn
Flahet! Betcha, Bil, that garray it trainin' on
Talk of concerted action on
Consulation and
Examination Free.
43tf
I he
self a
of Co
< ‛orint
tion
Commissioner Terrell
and H
Mi o’<d«
----0--
Austin, Tex., Aug. 22.
State and Federal highway aid
was today granded the follow-
Juenke £ Schoenewolf
| General Merchants
J S. W. 14 Phones C. T. 147.
Cmuntry Produce Bou ht and Sold* 47
000 for No. 7;
027 for No. 5;
• I he
self as
to the
Gillesg
gular I
fresh fruits now in season; and,
as an extra-dessert treat, serve
Kellogg’s with fresh fruit and
plenty of cream!
Kellogg’s Corn Flakes are sold
only in the RED and GREEN
package bearing the signature of
W K. Kellogg, originator of Corn
Flakes. None are genuine with-
out it I
Are You Ruled By Prejudice?
There are still a few people who are “afraid’’ off
anything new.
They scoff at new discoveries.
They try to redicule that about which they know
nothing.
If one can get profit by a harmless, drugless, anti
manipulating science isn’t it within reason to suggest that
you try that science?
Chiropractic adds nothing to nor does it take any]
thing from the body.
By relieving the pressure on in,pinged nerves in the
FOR OVER 40 YEARS
HALL9 CATARRH MEDICINE hat
been used successfully in the treatment
of Catarrh.
HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE con
sists of an Ointment which Quickly
Relieves by local application, and the
Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which act:
through the Blood on the Mucous Bur
faces, thus reducing the inflammation.
Hold by all druggists.
F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio.
--,.25
(.ez fi/S-•>
- “k exMs -
ing counties:
Washington County,
for highway No. 36;
Bowie, $50,000. for Sulphur
River Bridge; Jasper, $100,000
for No. 7 and 8; Hardin. $175-
000for Nos. 8 and 40; Sabine,
$65,000 for No. 21 ; Newton, $20-
a d we er 'rt hi n on out tvam,
Gee, m. ybe ha at runnin’ some
cers and thus had their records
esmirched by a side report. art
or the sake of revenge.
It is said that the action of
Congress in discharging 1,700
fficers will not make for great
ceonomy. Officers retired with
nore than 20 years of service
till draw three-fourths pay or
3 per cent each year in the ser-
vice. Those with 10 years or
less will get discharge with one
year of pay and those of more
than 12 years and less than 20
years service, will get two and
one-halb per cent for each year
in the service.
--00-----
Austin, Tex., Aug 22. — The
Texas cotton crop this year
probably will not pass the 2,-
500,(MIO bale mark, due to con-
tinued drouth and dry weather
and damage from the boll wee-
vil and leaf worm, according to
George B Terrell, State Com-
missioner of Agriculture. Re-
ports received by the State De-
partment since the beginning of
the present month indicate a
shorter crop than was predicted
in the commissioner’s report
based on August 1. conditions.
“Severe damage has been
done the crop since August 1
by drouth and hot winds, caus-
ing the cotton to shed its fruit
in all the western part of the
Sun Artonie
II lIopkins
An Opportunity to serve you will be appreciated
Hey There!
How about your letterheads,
billheads, statements, enve-
lopes, cards, etc. Don’t wait
until they are all gone and
then ask us to rush them out
in a hurry for you. Good work
Texarkana, Texas, August 22
Within tin last few years the
5656th Brigade Vavalry
futile. It was decided to shoot trees, gardens. ete.
agent, near Torrecillas,
County, by bootleggers,
arraigned before United
Commissioner R L. Ed-
feature they hit also becoming
a menace to buildings, yards.
week to tactical
as a feature of
training course.
Let us have that order N-O-W
while we have the time to do your
Printing at it thoald be done.
he plucking board, as
months, officers said.
Heidt has been conductig a
cafe here for more than a year.
He said his alleged embezzle-
ment amounted to only $10,000
and that he has a receipt from
that bank for that amount.
। He added that he believed the
, Alabama Federal jury had re-
turned the indictment without
knowledge of his having cleared
himself with the bank.
was held and
by a man in
2.732,9/20)
pn
Cd *
aREs
“Emek.
Ha . -I
5Ej
wards, yesterday charged with
conspiring to transport liquor
from Laredo to San Antonio. He
waived preliminary hearing and
was released on $1,000 bond for
his appearance at the November
term of Federal court in Laredo.
The original complaint was
filed in Laredo where a warrant
for his arrest was issued. He
was arrested by Charles Stevens,
prohibition enforcement official.
Charges of the conspiracy
against Torres grew out of state-
ments made to Federal agents
while confined in city jail hero
that he had loaned an automo-
bile to a Mexican from San
Diego who said he wanted to go
to the border.
boll weevil is reported from all'
parts of the State as is serious
damage by the leaf worm in the
eastern part. Damage from
these posts will continue during
the rest of the season.”
Commissioner Terrell in his
August report estimated the
yield of Texas cotton at 135
pounds of lint per acre, or little ।
plague to hundreds of I
this city. It is said
ol $8,50 l‛at rolman Hopkins of Substa
at the tion No 1.
I . __________
there is a strong prospect that
an ant “drive’’ will be put on
and pushed at an early date.
Miss Lena Owen, demonstra-
। tion agent for the State Nation-
al Bank, has announced that she
is willing and ready to head an
. ant destroying crusade as soon
soon as the women of Texarkana
give the word.
---0---
San Antonio, Tex., Aug. 22.—
At least four captains and three
majors of Camp Travis have
been slated for separation from
I the service, according to friends
of the officers who stated yester-
day that confidential reports had
been received from the “pluck-
ing board” through the War De-
partment.
The Eighth Corps Area will
!(se one of its very best how it-
zer officers through the action
of the plucking board in slating
one of the Second Division cap-
tains for retirement, as well as
11 others here who have receiv-
d notices of their separation
from the service, holds a high
• ffiieney record in the army.
Sentiment in army circles here
is in no way in harmony with
the action taken by Congress in
plucking” at least 1,700 of the
officers from active service. One
er stated yesterday that the
acre. fact of one having a clean
more than
acre This
it total pr
hales
♦ 1 Inlay
• lh. injured:
000••4• •00••0•9 | ||
Do Y mi Awake .........I., t-,. Auu e e.....
Im l and Waak® ...... was arrested here ........u c...........y to sl...... that
Hit > ooU ViedR. Faturday night after the sl...... .........any’x No. 2 HIerrell test
Houston, Tex., Aug. 22. —
When a dynamite charge explo-
ded at Goose Creek this mor-
ning, two men were instantly
killed and another painfully in-
jured :
smith, were making up thechar-
ge in Holliday's shop when the
dynamite exploded, killing both
and horribly mangling their
bodies. Felter, assistant to
Holliday, was painfully but not
seriously injured.
Woods and Holliday were
married, each leaving a wife
and several children.
4
(•
mil* him bark 6 cents or
fan Hopkins is the son of
well the part of the people to get rid
black- of the pest is being heard and
I her
hext 11
Tires at lowest prices, both
phones 187
White Line Oarage
Trinity, $8,767 for No. 19: Colo-
rado. $15,000 for bridge over
the Colorado on No. 3-D; Travis
$10,000 for No. 20, known as the
Manor Road; Reeves, $22,500
for No. 10; Delta $25,000 for
Nos. 19 and 39; MeLennan, $18,-
000 for No. 7; Bastrop $1000 for
No. 3-A; Nueces, $100,000 for
No. 12 in the Bishop district; La
Salle, $30,000 for bridge over the
the Frio on No. 2; Polk, $2,311
for No. 35; Wood, $23,000 for
No. 37 south of Mineola, ami
Blanco $12,000 for No. 46.
---0---
Austin, Texas, August 22.
Staff officers and men of the
ice headquarters Mason
asked the man if he
----O-----
Dallas, Tex., Aug. 22.— Web-
ster B. Heidt, aged 34 years,
former teller of the First Na-
tional Bank of Gadsden, Ala., is
I in jail here in default of 2,500
bond on a charge of embezzling
$25,00 from the Gadsden bank.
He was arrested Saturday after
a two-year search, was arranged
before a United States commis-
sinner, yesterday, admitting his
identity and bail was fixed.
Failing to make bond, he will
be held in jail until removed to
Alabama, officers said.
The alleged embezzlement co-
vered a period of several
fhe dear: years
M P Wuods and P H H"I wrviei
United States Army instructors
have assigned a problem for so-
lution under virtually exact war
conditions.
They have designated the Co-
lorado River as the boundary
line between the two countries,
and the Blues are in possession
of the north boundary and the
Reds are in possession of the
south. The 56th Cavalry Bri-
gade of the 28th Cavalry Divi-
sion. now in camp at Mabry,
with Battery B, 82d Field Ar-
tillery, horse, aatached. were
ordered to proceed to the vicin-
ity of Penn Field to establish
a bridgehead and to cover Aus-
tin until the arrival of a brigade
of th 32d Division Infantry,
which is coming into the lines
Both officers and men are en-
tering into this problem as if
actual warfare was in force.
As there is a $50 prize for the
cleanest barracks and kitchen
during the 16-day encampment
for cavalry units stationed at
Camp Mabry, all units are ex-
erting themselves each day in
order to make the best impres-
sion on the inspectors. So far
the Brenham troop is leading the
field.
Preparations are under 'way
for a field day, which will be
held on Sunday. August 27.
Troop B. 56th M. G. Squad-
ron. San Antonio, boasts that
their 14 ono-commissioned offi-
cers are all ex-service men, none
having less than three years’
service and some more than 10
•ases many of the most efficient
oung officers have had “ run-
has inereased to such
as to have become a r
q e
(E, X =: a ~
cl
All their ofieers are eX-
mnen alto.
--0--
Slee by Taking
irouized Yeast
Vug 22
—KI. IIL EEI . "It i’ .
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Schumacher, Oscar R. Fredericksburg Standard (Fredericksburg, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 48, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 26, 1922, newspaper, August 26, 1922; Fredericksburg, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1418453/m1/4/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .